One day I was chopping up my yellow squash to have as a side with some mussels in spicy marinara and I thought, I wonder if this kind of squash would work as spaghetti.
There is of course a spaghetti squash that people use this way, but I thought I'd give it a go with regular yellow squash.
Like all good Italian food, this is the most simple recipe. The list of what you'll need is almost not necessary:
yellow squash
salt
Romano cheese, to taste
First I cut the squash into strips so it would look like spaghetti.
I put a pot of water on to boil and salted it like I would with pasta water.
I cooked the strips until they were tender. Then I ran them under cold water to stop the cooking process so they wouldn't get so mushy.
I topped it with marinara and grated Romano and tested it out.
Turns out it's really hard to stop the squash from getting a little too mushy, even with the cold water rinse. Perhaps I'll try this again with a different cooking technique. The flavor was great though. This is one of the drawing board.
There is of course a spaghetti squash that people use this way, but I thought I'd give it a go with regular yellow squash.
Like all good Italian food, this is the most simple recipe. The list of what you'll need is almost not necessary:
yellow squash
salt
Romano cheese, to taste
First I cut the squash into strips so it would look like spaghetti.
I put a pot of water on to boil and salted it like I would with pasta water.
I cooked the strips until they were tender. Then I ran them under cold water to stop the cooking process so they wouldn't get so mushy.
I topped it with marinara and grated Romano and tested it out.
Turns out it's really hard to stop the squash from getting a little too mushy, even with the cold water rinse. Perhaps I'll try this again with a different cooking technique. The flavor was great though. This is one of the drawing board.
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